THE SINGLE BIGGEST FACTOR IN LONG-TERM ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS

The Single Biggest Factor in Long-Term Organizational Success

“What ultimately constrains the performance of your organization is not its business model, nor its operating model, but its management model.” (The Future of Management, Gary Hamel)

Factors of organizational success:

Jim Collins says the key factors for success include:

  1. Getting the right people on the bus
  2. Getting the right people in the right seats.
  3. Getting the wrong people off the bus.
  4. Level 5 leadership – Humble leaders with indomitable will. (Good to Great)

Managers:

“Gallup finds that the quality of managers and team leaders is the single biggest factor in your organization’s long-term success.” (It’s the Manager)

Organizations ask, “How do managers get more out of people?”

“Ironically, the management model encapsulated in this question virtually guarantees that a company will never get the best out of its people. Vassals and conscripts may work hard, but they don’t work willingly.” Gary Hamel

Boss to coach:

The BEST managers are coaches, not bosses. Jim Clifton and Jim Harter say there are three requirements of coaching.

  1. Establish expectations.
  2. Continually coach.
  3. Create accountability.

3 tips for shifting from boss to coach:

#1. Understand the dance between freedom and intervention.

Give high performers freedom. Intervene when performance lags.

Intervention isn’t oppression or punishment. It might mean weekly one-on-ones, instead of monthly.

#2. Overcome the most difficult shift.

Solving problems for talented people devalues their talent. Over-helpfulness sucks the life out of talented people. Stop giving quick answers.

Coaches help people find their own answers. The old style of management, when people were tools, is to give them answers and expect conformity.

#3. Practice accountability that energizes people.

Accountability that energizes is self-imposed. We need to rise above the false notion that we can force people into high performance.

Noticing is healthy accountability. Walk around noticing performance as it relates to expectation.

Work that isn’t noticed goes down in value.

What factors enhance long-term organizational success?

How might managers bring out the best in people?

 

 

Emotional Intelligence Has 12 Elements. Which Do You Need to Work On?

https://hbr.org/2017/02/emotional-intelligence-has-12-elements-which-do-you-need-to-work-on?utm_campaign=hbr&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

feb17-06-682304915

There are many models of emotional intelligence, each with its own set of abilities; they are often lumped together as “EQ” in the popular vernacular. We prefer “EI,” which we define as comprising four domains: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, and relationship management. Nested within each domain are twelve EI competencies, learned and learnable capabilities that allow outstanding performance at work or as a leader (see the image below). These include areas in which Esther is clearly strong: empathy, positive outlook, and self-control. But they also include crucial abilities such as achievement, influence, conflict management, teamwork and inspirational leadership. These skills require just as much engagement with emotions as the first set, and should be just as much a part of any aspiring leader’s development priorities.

WHEN SILENCE IS PAINFUL, NOT GOLDEN

https://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/2016/11/30/when-silence-is-painful-not-golden/

let-aspiration-not-frustration-be-the-motivation-to-address-poor-performance

 

Coaching Needs for Leaders in Times of Uncertainty

http://www.coachingtip.com/2015/04/coaching-needs-for-leaders-in-times-of-uncertainty-1.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CoachingTip+%28Coaching+Tip%29

Cmodelsjpg

The Eyes of Madison Bumgarner’s Coach – A Lesson in World-Class Coaching from Dave Righetti, the Coach of the World Series MVP

The Eyes of Madison Bumgarner’s Coach – A Lesson in World-Class Coaching from Dave Righetti, the Coach of the World Series MVP

The pitcher and his coach - Bumgarner and Righetti